10/07/2008
The mystery of
those Iranian missiles gets more entertaining by the hour.
Not only did the
Telegraph print the doctored picture, obtained by
Agence France-Presse from the website of
Sepah News, it also graced the front page of
The Los Angeles Times,
The Chicago Tribune and several other newspapers including the
National Post. According to the
National Post, it also appeared on BBC News, MSNBC, Yahoo! News, NYTimes.com and many other major news websites.
The Telegraph has now published the "original" in the form of a
video grab (left) from Iranian television, which shows the actual launch of three missiles.
This compares with its earlier photograph in the print version (below right). What comes over very clearly is that the Iranians have added another missile to their montage, a creative addition which adds drama to the picture.
Bizarrely, the
Sepah News website owned by Iran's Revolutionary Guards has now made available as of today the original version of the same photograph (below left), this with the three missiles in flight, but with a fourth launcher visible, mounting an unfired missile. This, it would appear, had been edited out of the doctored photograph.
To add to the fun,
The Telegraph now retails that the Iranian state television has today reported missiles launched from ships in the Gulf, along with torpedoes and surface-to-surface missiles. It also showed a brief clip of two missiles being fired in darkness â very convenient as this will complicate any comparative analysis.
Gone from the
Telegraph's report is the caution in the earlier piece, "reported" details now assuming the veneer of fact, the paper now stating that the latest test follows "Wednesday's launch of nine missiles including a Shahab 3 long-range missile capable of hitting Israel."
Iranian officials, we are told, "suggested that missile had been improved to a range of 1,250 miles." Israeli intelligence officials, we are also informed, "have suggested this was an exaggeration."
In respect of at least one missile, however, the performance is not so much "exaggerated" as non-existent. How easy do the media fall for these tricks though, making their reports and photographs highly suspect. You would think they would learn.
UPDATE: Many newspapers are now
falling over themselves to admit they have been "had", with a good animated version
here.
Significantly,
The Telegraph is running a story on how the Iranians doctored the photo to hide a "dud", but does not mention that it had published the doctored picture, without noticing the crude photoshopping.
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